Friday, October 31, 2014

Symbaloo

I am one month in as an instructional coach now, and although I enjoy my new position, one drawback is that I miss working with kids. One of the reasons for this is because I am discovering numerous teaching resources and am unable to try them out with the students. Since I cannot utilize my new learnings directly with the kids, the next best thing for me is to disseminate the information to other teachers for student use. Therefore, the other WDMCSD secondary instructional coaches and I created a Symbaloo site to house these teacher resources.

Symbaloo is visual bookmarking tool that organizes what you find on the internet. Our Symbaloo site houses different tools and resources beneficial to teachers in the district. We have bookmarks for the Teaching Channel, Kahoot, the Iowa Core, and much more. This is a work in progress, so please be patient as we add more links to our board.

To see our site, go to http://www.symbaloo.com/mix/toolsandresources2.



Friday, October 24, 2014

The World of Twitter

Twitter is becoming a popular network for educators. It can be a valuable tool to learn about the latest trends in education, gather ideas for the classroom, find educational blogs, and much more.

For those new to Twitter, here are some sites to help you become acquainted with the social network:
Here are some suggestions of who to follow in the educational world on Twitter:
  • @TeachingChannel - TeachingChannel (It is an online community where teachers watch, share, and learn techniques for the classroom.)
  • @edutopia - Edutopia (It shares research-based strategies in the field of K-12 education.)
  • @robertjmarzano - Robert Marzano
  • @BIEpbl - Buck Institute for Education (BIE is a leader in Project Based Learning)
  • @WDMCS - The West Des Moines Community School District 
  • @StilwellJH - Stilwell Junior High School
  • @vhstigers - Valley Tigers (It gives updates on Valley High School activities)


Friday, October 17, 2014

The Importance of Learning Targets

For roughly three years now, we have been using learning targets in the West Des Moines Community School District. We know that it is a one-word sentence describing what the student will learn, and we do a great job of posting them somewhere in the classroom for the students to see. Most of us even understand that learning targets tie in with our district goal, the Essentials of Effective Instruction (more specifically- how will my students know what they will be learning today).

But just because we know what a learning target is, does that mean we can create an effective, appropriate one for our students? Do we know if the learning target posted for students is what they are supposed to be learning? As teachers, can we write a target that is meaningful to children, and they can describe in their own words? And how do we know if they hit the target by the end of the lesson?

To address these issues, we need to do the following:
  • Collaborate with our Professional Learning Communities (PLCs) to determine what the students should be learning. By looking at the Common Core (or Iowa Core, or the WDMCS standards and benchmarks), we need to agree on the most important concepts, called power standards, to cover in the course of a year. This will ensure that we create targets based on what the students should be learning.
  • Determine how we will know when the students hit the target. As PLCs, we need to decide what it will look like when a student has demonstrated mastery of the content.
  • Go above and beyond posting the learning targets in  our classroom. We should ask students to define the learning target in their own words and use formative assessments to gauge their level of mastery.
Constructing meaningful learning targets is no easy accomplishment. It can take years of collaborating, writing, and revising to produce targets that are relevant to students, teachers, administrators, and parents. But it is necessary if we want to create classrooms of intentional, motivated learners.

References:


Moss, C. M., & Brookhart, S. M. (2012). Learning Targets: Helping Students Aim for Understanding in Today's Lesson. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.


Friday, October 10, 2014

New Learnings

I have now successfully completed my first full week of instructional coaching, and it is amazing to see already how much I have grown as an educator in such a short span of time. This growth can be attributed to the fact that I now have more time to collaborate and learn from others in the West Des Moines Community School District.

I am going to let the readers in on the dirty, little secret of being an instructional coach: we are not know-it-alls with infinite amounts of knowledge and creativity. Most (okay, maybe all) of our ideas are actually stolen from others. And many of these ideas come directly from our colleagues.

Here is a very small snippet of my new learnings and where I obtained them:

1) Although there are no national standards for social studies, there is a national framework for enhancing the rigor of K-12 civics, economics, geography, and history based on the ELA Common Core (http://www.socialstudies.org/system/files/c3/C3-Framework-for-Social-Studies.pdf). I learned about this from our curriculum director.

2) In the Common Core, there are standards for mathematical practice that all math teachers should seek to develop in their students, such as, "make sense of problems and persevere in solving them" (http://www.corestandards.org/Math/Practice/). I gained this bit of knowledge from a math teacher here at Stilwell.

3) A teacher can calculate his/her semester grades by total points from both quarters, in addition to averaging 1st and 2nd (or 3rd and 4th) quarter grades. Another teacher in the building taught me this one.

4) There is a program already installed on our desktops that allows us to draw on images from the document cameras, as well as record videos without using an SD card. One of the district's professional development curriculum facilitators showed me this program, which is called Ladibug.

Collaborating with my colleagues has allowed me the opportunity to learn these new skills, which I can pass on to others. I appreciate the interactions I have had with my co-workers this past week and am looking forward to future, collaborative learning experiences.